Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dysphagia and aspiration seem to be rare in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, but cachexia can be associated with early death. Commonly, weight loss can be attributed to inadequate caloric intake caused by loss of ability to self-feed and/or fatigue. Our objective was to determine whether scoliosis repair is associated with malnutrition. A retrospective chart review was undertaken of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, including those who underwent operative repair of scoliosis. We identified nine boys who lost > 5% body weight within 12 months of surgery. Eight patients who gained weight after surgery and eight patients of comparable age who had no surgery served as control subjects. All patients had no change in biceps strength after surgery, but those who lost weight were unable to self-feed. We found that weight loss after surgery was associated with loss of self-feeding. We conclude that pre- and postoperative management of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy should include feeding evaluation and determination of postural changes.
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PMID:Postoperative malnutrition in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 1266 33

The authors carried out a research project in a nursing consultancy on patients suffering from Human Immunodeficiency Virus. Their study comprised 108 patients. The authors analysed the causes which provoke nutritional problems since the signs and symptoms derived from this disease are associated with opportunistic infections which directly affect nutritional requirements. The authors selected variables which would determine general parameters for a nutritional study: anthropological measurement parameters such as weight, height and other basic vital measurements; Biochemical parameters such as albumin and ferritin; clinical parameters such as diarrhoea, vomiting, anorexia, fever, and dysphagia. The biochemical parameters provided evidence in the albumin measurements that 65.28% of these patients suffer from severe malnutrition. With regards to anthropological measurements, basic vitals showed that 16.8 of these patients have a normal range while 52.64% fall below the 10th percentile which demonstrate important levels of cachexia. In the near future, these authors shall publish their study regarding the eating habits of these patients and its relationship to their nutritional status.
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PMID:[Nutrition in HIV patients]. 1450 91

BACKGROUND: Eosinophilic gastritis is related to eosinophilic gastroenteritis, varying only in regards to the extent of disease and small bowel involvement. Common symptoms reported are similar to our patient's including: abdominal pain, epigastric pain, anorexia, bloating, weight loss, diarrhea, ankle edema, dysphagia, melaena and postprandial nausea and vomiting. Microscopic features of eosinophilic infiltration usually occur in the lamina propria or submucosa with perivascular aggregates. The disease is likely mediated by eosinophils activated by various cytokines and chemokines. Therapy centers around the use of immunosuppressive agents and dietary therapy if food allergy is a factor. CASE PRESENTATION: The patient is a 31 year old Caucasian female with a past medical history significant for ulcerative colitis. She presented with recurrent bouts of vomiting, abdominal pain and chest discomfort of 11 months duration. The bouts of vomiting had been reoccurring every 7-10 days, with each episode lasting for 1-3 days. This was associated with extreme weakness and cachexia. Gastric biopsies revealed intense eosinophilic infiltration. The patient responded to glucocorticoids and azathioprine. The differential diagnosis and molecular pathogenesis of eosinophilic gastritis as well as the molecular effects of glucocorticoids in eosinophilic disorders are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: The patient responded to a combination of glucocorticosteroids and azathioprine with decreased eosinophilia and symptoms. It is likely that eosinophil-active cytokines such as interleukin-3 (IL-3), granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and IL-5 play pivotal roles in this disease. Chemokines such as eotaxin may be involved in eosinophil recruitment. These mediators are downregulated or inhibited by the use of immunosuppressive medications.
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PMID:Eosinophilia in a patient with cyclical vomiting: a case report. 1514 61

This study involved longitudinal evaluations of symptom severity and describes the symptom patterns of 77 terminal cancer patients (median age: 62 years; 61% female), selected from 537 consecutive patients admitted to the Palliative Care Unit of the National Taiwan University Hospital. The most common primary cancer sites in these patients were lung (23.4%), liver (15.6%), and stomach (13%). Nineteen physical and psychological symptoms were assessed using different scales. The median number of symptoms was 11 (range: 1-18) on admission, among which weakness, fatigue, anorexia, pain, and depression were the most common. A comparison of the initial symptom severity scores with those at one week after admission and two days before death suggested six symptom change patterns: A: continuous static (restless/heat, abdominal fullness, constipation, dizziness, and insomnia); B: static-increase (fatigue, weakness, nausea/vomiting, taste alteration, dysphagia, diarrhea, dry mouth, and night sweats); C: decrease-static (pain and depression); D: decrease-increase (anorexia and dyspnea); E: static-decrease (aggression); and F: gradually decrease (anxiety). These six symptom patterns can be divided into two categories on the basis of the relative severity of symptoms between one week after admission and two days before death. The first category included patterns A, C, E and F, and the symptoms improved with palliative care. However, the symptoms in the second category (patterns B and D), which were associated with the anorexia-cachexia syndrome and dyspnea, did not show improvement. As symptom management is an essential component of palliative care, holistic care, which encompasses physical, psychosocial and spiritual aspects, represents a rational approach for the relief of these incurable symptoms at the end stage of life for these patients.
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PMID:Symptom patterns of advanced cancer patients in a palliative care unit. 1706 Feb 55

Esophago-respiratory fistulas, evolving as a result of esophageal tumors, are serious and lethal complications on account of the constant respiratory contamination and the inability to swallow. They can develop either as the complication of the end stage disease or sometimes even in the first stage of the malignancy. The objective was to reveal the characteristics of the disease. In a prospective single-center study in the period between 1984 and 2004, 243 fistulas were diagnosed. Their data were analyzed using multivariate analysis. The mean age of patients with fistula was 56.9 years, the male-to-female ratio was 4.3:1. The average time of the complaints was 5.2 months, while the time of manifestation of the fistula was 7.5 months. Dysphagia was diagnosed in 97.5% of the patients, fever in 36.9%, and cachexia in 59.5%, respectively. The average loss of weight was 10.4 kg and the average size of the tumor was 7.7 cm. Endoscopic intubation was performed in 176 cases. The average survival was 3.4 months. Patients with fistula were divided into two groups, where the characteristics of the disease were significantly different. Only in 66.3% was the fistula a late complication. In the other 33.7% of the cases the fistula was diagnosed in younger patients at the early stage of the disease, with a more aggressive, less differentiated histology. In these patients the weight loss, the grade of dysphagia and the size of the tumor were smaller, the possibilities of treatment were fewer, and survival were shorter.
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PMID:[Pathological characteristics of esophago-respiratory fistulas of esophageal tumor origin]. 1864 Aug 92

Patients undergoing neoadjuvant therapy for esophageal cancer are at a high risk for malnutrition due to the effects of chemoradiation, dysphagia, and malignancy induced cachexia. Preparation for esophagectomy requires careful assessment of nutritional risk and adequate supplementation as indicated. Supplementation via the enteral route is preferred to the parenteral route but requires feeding tube placement. Endoscopically placed silicone stents have also shown promise as a means to alleviate malnutrition and avoid invasive feeding tubes.
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PMID:Nutritional management during neoadjuvant therapy for esophageal cancer. 1987 18

This study reports the development of a simple Chinese Prognostic Scale (ChPS) for predicting survival in advanced cancer patients. Data relating to 1,019 advanced cancer patients referred to a palliative home care service were retrospectively analyzed. The records were divided into two sets using stratified random sampling: 80% as a "training set" for developing the scale and 20% as a "testing set" for validating it. Demographic data, symptoms/signs, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS), quality of life (QOL), and survival time were statistically analyzed to create the scale. In the training set, a total of 10 prognostic factors were determined: weight loss, nausea, dysphagia, dyspnea, edema, cachexia, dehydration, gender, KPS, and QOL. The ChPS score was calculated for each case by summing the partial scores of prognostic factors, ranging from 0 (no altered variables) to 124 (maximal altered variables). The score for a cutoff point of three months' survival was 28 (95% confidence interval: 26.6, 28.9). When scores were more than 28, survival appeared to be usually less than three months. The accuracy rate was 69.4% in the training set and 65.4% in the testing set. In conclusion, it is possible with this prognostic scale to guide physicians in predicting more accurately the likely survival time of Chinese cancer patients, and to help policy makers in establishing appropriate referral for hospice care.
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PMID:Prediction of survival time in advanced cancer: a prognostic scale for Chinese patients. 1960 78

Gliomas are rare entities in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) in adults. The authors present clinical, neuroradiological, serological, and neuropathological findings in a 60-year-old man with an extraaxial CPA glioblastoma arising from the proximal portion of cranial nerve VIII. The patient presented with progressive left-sided deafness and left-sided facial palsy lasting less than 2 months and progressive dysarthria and dysphagia lasting 2 weeks. Preoperative neuroimaging suggested the diagnosis of CPA meningioma with "dural-tail" sign and involvement of the internal auditory canal. Serological examination showed an increase in the malignant markers of ferritin and neuron-specific enolase, which suggested underlying malignancy. The tumor was subtotally removed, and it was confirmed to be completely separated from the brainstem and cerebellum. Cranial nerves VII and VIII were destroyed and sacrificed. Transient severe bradycardia occurred during surgery due to entrapment of the caudal cranial nerve complex by the tumor in such an infiltrative way. The neuropathological examination revealed a glioblastoma. The patient underwent no further treatment and died of cachexia 2 months postoperatively. To the authors' knowledge, this represents the first case of a primary glioblastoma in the CPA in an adult. A high index of suspicion along with reliance on clinical assessment, radiological findings, and serum detection of specific malignant markers is essential to diagnose such uncommon CPA lesions.
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PMID:Primary glioblastoma of the cerebellopontine angle in adults. 2178 Aug 57

Clinically obvious reasons why children with neurological impairment (NMI) may be more severely affected in case of a viral respiratory tract infection include reduced vital capacity due to muscular weakness or spastic scoliosis, disturbed clearance of respiratory excretions (weak coughing and dysphagia), inability to comply actively with physiotherapeutic interventions, recurrent micro-aspirations (gastroesophageal reflux disease, vomiting related to coughing), a history of frequent exposure to antibiotics and health care institutions, colonization with resistant pathogens, impaired immunologic defence mechanisms due to severe malnutrition and cachexia, and early clinical deterioration in case of high fever with metabolic acidosis and hypercapnia, and maybe associated seizures or febrile convulsions.Data from the literature suggests that in all children with NMI, who have to be hospitalized with severe clinical deterioration due to an airway infection, at least one specimen of nasopharyngeal secretions should be sent as soon as possible to a virologic laboratory to detect viral pathogens. Children with severe NMI and those mechanically ventilated for other reasons being hospitalized during the RSV season must be strictly protected against nosocomial RSV infection by means of standard and droplet precautions. Finally, children with severe NMI and age below 24 months of life should receive passive immunization with palivizumab following international recommendations.
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PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus infection in children with neuromuscular impairment. 2226 88

Antineoplastic chemotherapy (CT) represents the systemic treatment of malignant tumors. It can be used alone or combined with surgery and / or radiotherapy. The cytotoxic agents used in chemotherapy work on both cancerous cells and noncancerous cells of the body, generally resulting in high toxicity. The biological aggressiveness of chemotherapy particularly affects rapidly replicating cells, such as those of the digestive tract, resulting in adverse effects that impair food intake, leading to compromised nutritional status and which may lead to cachexia. The main toxic effects of chemotherapy in the gastrointestinal tract include nausea, vomiting -these are the most frequent- constipation, diarrhea, xerostomia, mucositis, dysphagia and anorexia. Given the high frequency of such effects, nutritional intervention should be an integral part of cancer treatment, to maintain and/or improve the patient's nutritional status and reduce or minimize the side effects caused by treatment. Accordingly, the goal of this study is to review dietetic conduct in the process of caring for patients undergoing cancer chemotherapy.
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PMID:Dietetic management in gastrointestinal complications from antimalignant chemotherapy. 2256 5


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